The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 362, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 30, 1922 Page: 3 of 10
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TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1922
THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
PAGE THREE
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a
Hart Schaffner & Marx Dixie Weaves
Walter Wilcox
Stylish—cool—economical
SPOTS (MIDDLING).
$21.50
$25
$27.50 to $40
LIVERPOOL SPOTS.
Other desirable Summer Suits—
$12
$15
$17.50
guest during the national meet.
imumusususunususnsumnneuannnmuwumirsumenunmumususumumusuwusunumsmusnsunussmna
ianniiuiune imumumi
All we ask is, Come and Look.
KANSAS CITY LIVESTOCK.
I
s
R
COPPER STILL FISHED
MRS. CAROTHERS WILL
OUT OF FLOOD WATERS CHAPERONE PARTY ON
ilk, $10.20010.45;
sows, $7.0007.25; pigs steady, $10,656
RESULTS IN ARREST
EUROPEAN JOURNEY
r
X
The four
t,
r
Ratchford reported he found the still.
A. J. Kleberg, all of Austin.
i
Commissioner Lockhart, Segurra
said
V
he fished the still out of the Colorado
a CUBS AND CARDINALS
)
EXCHANGE PLAYERS
TO LECTURE ON ANTHROPOLOGY
By Associated Press.
Kansas and Texas Railway, was found
this morning.
an
fldials here are investigating the cir-
t
BELGIAN BICYCLIST
a few days ago started the new flurry
y
, in movie circles, was the object of a
f
Godowsky,
Leopold Godowsky,
For every purpose for which a Bimi-
ment is usually applied the modern
af
l
n ot ।
by Bcowne & odiorne.
il
V
o
Graduation gifts in good taste and
of high quality that he will prize .
New Orleans
Austin ......
Come On In!
The IValer’s Fine!
DENISON RAILROAD MAN
KILLS SELF IN BATHROOM
e
n
L
r
A public lecture will be given this
evening at the University of Texas by
Dr. A. L. Kroeber, head of the de-
DENISON. Texas, May 30—Harry
Brooks, 50, an employe of the Missouri.
PERMANENT POSSESSION
FRANK TROPHY GOES
reported the Mexican had hidden parts
of the still in various places at his
home near the river front on San An-
Previous
Open. High. Low Close. Close
. . 20.75 20.82 20.69 20.80 10.69
. . 20.23 20.23 10.15 20.21 20.13 1
. . 19.98 20.00 19.92 19.97 19.92 ‘
. . 19.75 19.78 19.75 19.75 19.68 1
. 19.45 19.48 19.46 19.51 19.40
CHAPTER OF GAMMA PHI
BETA IS INSTALLED AT
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
ST. LOVIS, May 30.—Pitcher Mar-
vin Goodwin, right hander of the St
daughter of Dr.
noted pianist.
July .
Oct. .
Dec. .
Jan. .
March
11
It
n
d
l
y
VARSITY ATHLETES GET
MERIT CERTIFICATES
f
t
Stebbins & James
Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes
TEXAS TENNIS STARS
GET CHANCE TO GO TO
NATIONAL TOURNEY
20.50
20.39
STOCKHOLDERS GATHER
FROM ALL SECTIONS TO
TESTIFY AGAINST COX
LEWIS WHITE CAPTURES
VARSITY TENNIS TITLE
See Window
Display
linquent accounts, the office of Tax
Collector Fred Stenting was kept open
Tuesday with the entire staff at work
despite the fact that the day had been
declared a holiday for city employes. n
"We did not think it fair to close
LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN
EXPECTING WAGE CUT;
WILL NOT ACCEPT IT
into the bathroom found Brooks dy-
ing.
LUCKY
STRIKE
"ITS TOASTED"
NORTH TEXAN RESENTS
YANKEE APPELLATION
Stylish because they’re tailored as carefully as Hart
Schaffner & Marx three-piece suits; cool because
they’re made from light weight woolens; economical
because they last longer and don’t need to be cleaned
as often as most summer clothes do.
We show, too, a wide range of Palm Beach Suits, Mo-
hairs, Gaberdine and other Cool Fabrics in Men’s and
Young Men’s Models. You’ll like the new style touches;
the smart designing; the colorful fabrics. You’ll like
the new low prices—
Two Boxes for the
Price of one
JORDAN’S
Bathing Suits
$3.00 to $6.50
Pbituar””
MRS. LUIFE WAECHDER.
nation-wide search six years ago when
Britain she disappeared from New York.
8
u
be pn •‘The Relations of Anthropology i
to the Other Sciences,” and will be
! empty chamber was by his side.
His wife heard a shot and rushing
roe Nolen of the Alvine Athletic Club
of Chicago set a new record for the
distance of 4 hours 34 minutes 15 sec
ends, but since he started from scratch
g
L.
charge of making fire water” out of
algerita berries, was this morning re-
leased on 31000 final bond.
Both cases will be docketed for hear-
ing at the June term of federal court
which opens in Austin on June 12.
n
I
SPECIAL SALE
—On—
BOX STATIONERY
—
'GE
1
I
1
P-.
work more quickly, more thoroughly
and more pleasantly. Price. 38c, 60c
A
[.
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L
By Associated Press.
CHICAGO, May 30— Alphonse Ber-
ten ten of the Belgian-American Cycle
Club of Chicago won the 100-mike bi-
cycle race from Milwaukee to Chicago
given at K Hall, beginning at 8 o’clock.
The faculty, students and general
public are Invited to hear this lecture.
extend through England. Sootland,
Holland, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy,
• A
tonio street. '
Thomas Garden, who was arrester
last week by Federal officers, on i
it
t.
J
partment of anthropology of the Uni- i Kansas and Texas Railway. was found
versity of Callrornia. The lecture will i dead 1,1 the bathroom of hla home here
HOTEL MANAGER WHO
AIDED JIMMY DRAPER IS
SON OF AUSTIN MAN
A revolver with
Henry Walthall married Miss Mary
Charleftton five days after he had been
the condensed “White Mule.”
Segurra was arrested Monday after-
noon by United States Deputy Marshal
W. P. Ratchford on a charge of pos-
sessing the still. No liquor was found
on the premises at his home where ■
today in 4 hours 58 3-5 minutes. Mon-
Charter members of the sorority are*.
Misses Ardis Dean Keeling, San An-
, Mary Buckner, Moody; Mary
The party will Steussy, Austin; Harriet Ra rrick man
- French ntinaling; Lucile Francklow, Austin: Ma-
rian Hoss, Dallas; Edwina Duer, Dal-
las; Dorothy Hudson, Austin; Louise
Gladney, Fort Worth; Annie Hill, Aus-
tin; Leia Reese, Austin; Viola Baker,
Austin, and Lorena Baker, Austin.
Above, left to righte Winifred Hudnut or Mrs. Rodolph Valentino No. 2,
RK&lsa WMsMISIf1 Below, —
Alpha Zeta, the University chapter
of Gamma Phi Beta, national sorority.
In the neweat sorority chapter to be
Installed in the University. Thia
chapter was installed Monday evening
by Mrs. Horace Smith, national visit-
ing delegate. Assisting In the instal-
lation ceremony were Mines Eula Ful-
lerton and Gussie Lee Sullivan, mem-
ber. of the University of Oklahoma
Gamma Phi Beta Chapter, and Mrs
T. R. Garth, and Miss Beas Jane Lo-
sant both of Austin, alumnae members
of the sorority.
Patronesses of the Texas chapter
are: Mrs. G. U. Lansdowne, Mlaa
By Associated Press.
HOUSTON, Texas, May 30.—A mo-
tion to have the president and secre-
tary of the organisation prepare com-
plete instructions for firemen to leave
the service in event the United States
Railroad Laabor Board hands down a
decision reducing the wages of fire-1
men was made today from the floor of
the convention of the International
Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen
and Enginemen.
The motion, which wgs referred to
a special committee for consideration,
anticipated a decision reducing fire-
men’s wages.
Local Cotton Eichange ]
NEW ORLEANS COTTON.
By Associated Press
CHICAGO, May 89— Max Flack, out-
fielder for the Chicago Nationals, to-
day was traded to the St. Louis Car-
dinals. for Cliff Heathcote, also an
outfielder. The trade was even, no
money involved, and will take effect
at once.
Cigarette
It’s toasted. This
one extra process
gives a rare and
delightful quality
---impossible to
duplicate.
c Guaranteed by
K. M.. &
aboard, were reported missing today
■ and nothing further had been heard
' from the steam yacht Florence, report-
J ed late yesterday by the British
: steamer Siamese Prince as being dis-
| abled and at anchor twenty miles off
• St. John’s bar. The Florence put in
here several days ago for fuel and
was en route to Miami.
Tugs continued their efforts to float
the British schooner Perceler.
LOS ANGELES — While federal of-
, * ----t -— -- sent to thetionay intercollegiate
shnustnatnx“ot inarprospiuea Vni: Rindang
said. Details of the proposed trans-
action were not announced. "
nahnncapr’ston hadsheaexenonaminute
■
santedandivorfrom Isabelle I remgay,LiqydBorzone, ITn™:
Harrington in 1918. They were mar-1—-- ----- ■ —
ried at Crown Point Judge H. H.
Loring. Valparaiso, Ind., pronounceu
Walthall’s’second marrlaee alemal
won the Uniyersity championship in
singles. when he triumphed ever Lloyd
Gregory, of Austin, in the final round
sets were all very hard fought, many
long rallies marking the play, which
was in some particulars the best seen
on the varsity courts this season. Both
men were hitting the ball terrifically
hard, and White won mainly because
of his ability to combine great speed
with surprising consistency.
After winning the third set, Gregory
got away to a 3-1 lead in the fourth
set and it seemed for a time that
Gregory would win this set, and pull
the match “all-square,” for White was
Mrs. Luite Waechder, 81 years old.
died at the home of her son, T. J.
Waechder, 14 miles northwest of Aus-
n, at 7 a. m. Tuealay. The body was
brought to the Tesidence of J. 8.
Preece, Route 4, where the funeral
services will be held at 10 a. m. Wed-
nesday. Burial will be in Oakwood
cemetery.
10.75.
Sheep: Receipts, 5000 head; about
steady; fat native ewes, $5.5006.00;
spring lambs. 25c to 50c lower; top
। natives, 314.50.
Denby’s Party Sails for Japan.
By Associated Press.
PANAMA, May 30,—The United
States transport Henderson with Sec-
retary of the Navy Denby and mem-
bers of the naval academy class of 1881
on board sailed from here today on its
way to Japan. Before sailing a group
of Secretary Denby’s party made a
j tour of inspection through the canal
forfifications.
at 6—2; 63; 3—6;
a
And here are the Bathing Suits that will
make your fun so much more enjoyable.
Offered in a variety of styles, in a selec-
tion of plain colors or college stripes. The
prices are lower than they’ve been in sev-
eral years.
J. E. Alexander, assistant manager
of the Cooper-Carleton Hotel, Chicago,
who took in Jimmy Draper, George-
town High S- bool star, after he had
bummed his way for 1000 miles to run
in the 100-yard dash in the national
interscholastic meet,-is the son of N.
J. Alexander, East Austin druggist.
An article in the Chicago Tribune
telling of Jimmy Draper’s trip to Chi-
icago a la freight attracted Manager
Alexander's attention and resulted in
He married Dagmdr
Longhorn athletes who will be grad- 1
uated from the University this spring
will receive certificates from the ath-
letic council in recognition of their
athletic service while in the Univer- •
sity. Upon beautiful parchment paper •
the name of the outgoing athlete, to-
gether with whatever special honors
he may have won in the University. )‛
is engraved. The certificate is signed
by the president of the University and 1
by the president of the athletic council. '
outstanding features will be a visit to
------- — ---------- ------- the battlefields of France and the wit- i
River during the recent rise and tookinessing of the passion play at Ober-tonio;
his find home with him. Ratchford ammergau, Germany. The party wi,steussy
‘sail in September from a French port I Dallas;
for the Unite States.
the extending of the invitation to the ! LIVERPOOL, May 30.— Spot cotton
Georgetown youth to be the hotels in fair demand; prices firm. Goo3
1 0
N
, --------------- Germany and France. According to Cureton, Mrs. E. I*. Steck and M-2
When arraigned this morning before the girls who are making the tour, the A. J. Kleberg, all of Austin.
WINS LOMU RACE .
In honoring the American soldier dead. ed the fact that her real name, before
At Brookwood. 28 miles from London, her marriage, was Winifred De Wolfe,
the great plot of Goree-Studded When as Miss De Wolfe she disappear.
Eound in which rest 450 American sol- ed in 1916, two senators, a Russian
diers and egilors who gave their lives ambassador and scores of detectives
in the allied cause, was dedicated as a aided in the search for her. She was
national cemetery for the American i- found after months of search with the
ustrious dead.. dancink troupe of Theodore Kosloff.
Most of the American dead are those Rhe was using the name Vera Fredov,
who died in lnglish hospitals from Frank M. Sturgis, in charge of the
wounds received in Fiance and whose deparment ot justice bureau here, is
rlatizozowishedthatthey might rest «ine vAlentton maruimi saant into
in the soil of lo Mexico the once over*
lt you have any apparatus that may , For.the.ninth time, during her con-
be used for making hootch, get rid of neetion.W the.Univers t, orTexns
it, 1. the advice handed out byU, ziMrm.NehSarnthersamatroneoksthe
Segurra, Mexican, after being required I womans buiding. "!irthisssummer
to furnish $600 bail for having in his 1 ch aperone A no Enixersity.eirls
possession an innocent looking copper ; end eEurop „Eiehtxirla. the
2+21 rpL. ..0 N. a.. 1... .221.0 sines the chaperone, will comprise the
stl. The still was on display in the party. which will leave Boston harbor
h i'th? Commissioner P A. Lock: June 24 for Liverpool, England. These
hart 2? mornins.andwas completely girls are Misses jesse Mary ii, ianaa
equipped with coil and container for Wells, Elisabeth Wroe, Pearl Walker.
Mignonette Pearce, Mae Rene Flanary,
Katherine Pollard and Katherine Ca-
rothers.
The tour of the Varsity party will
Lutcher Stark of Orange. University
regent and friend of University ath-
———
' "Of course,»Kaia Mr. Stark In hl.! Mayo and Henry Waithal movie tan.
letter, “I do not wish to spend money are interested In the report that Wini-
on sending the boys on a wild goose fred Hudnut, whose marriage to Ru-
hane, but if you believe they have the dolph in Mexicli. Southern California,
stuff, you may count on me.” a few days ago started the new flurry
once more took command of the play,
and reeled off five games in succes-
sion. In these last games, White was
playing unbeatable tennis.
.' r
University students residing at a
certain campus rooming house were
made to realize yesterday just how
large the Lone Star state is. It all
happened this way:
Two boy students,, one from Ama-
rillo, the other from Brownsville, be-
came engaged In an argument as to
the comparative merits of South and
North Texas. The argument. which
started peaceably enough and was
conducted in the beginning in keeping
with the rules laid down by public
speaking instructors of the University,
soon waxed hot and furions. and the
two debaters, spurred on by a large
audtence, became ‘sore" at each other.
The < Umax of the discussion came
when the boy from Brownsville de-
reared vehemently: “Aw, what do you
know about South Texas, you d---
Yankee!”
OPEN FOR CONVENIENCE
OF TAXPAYERS TUESDAY
—•—
In order that city taxpayers may be
able to pay up at the city hall to
escape the imposjtion of the 5 per cent
penalty effective-June 1 on all de-
unaeumuanncsunususreu
This compliment pata to the boy
from Amarillo was the elgnal for a
violent physicel combat, which con-
tinuca until the landlady broke up the
hattie.with. her trunty broom Both
the Conuderate" and the “Yankee”
are now wearing beautiful “shiners*
At the same time District Attorney
Thomas Lee Woolwine and his assist-
ants are investigating the Valentino
wedding and also those of Henry Wal-
thall and Frank Mayo.
In connection with the Mann act
complaints Wool wine will go to Palm
Springs to look over the hotel register
where Rudolph Valentino and his bride,
Winifred Hudnut, are alleged to have
stayed after the ceremony.
Valentino was married before he re-
ceived his final divree papers from his
wife, Jean Acker. Mayo is believed
to have been..arried at Tia Juana
under the same circumstances, before
receiving his final decree from his
first wife.
= • -
| Three Movie Weddings Are
Probed; Recall Search for Bride t
■ = I
. ililllll I I •• ius » ('ll III Illi '• t|i namumumnnceumususreunimni I I t i l I l i neneun l sas |n(H| | ( |U||<||
“u
LOST—Route book. Please return
to the Fleischman Co. and receive re-
ward. G. G. Speckles.
LOST—Rim and tire No. 604842 on
rim. Finder please phone 2638. ,g
Monaay CITY TAX OFFICE KEPT
silver loving trophy. Joe Gill, a for-|ters, around $4.00; bulls, $3.7005.00;
mer student of the engineering depart- best vealers, $9.50010.00; stockers.
ment and now a prominent citizen of 1 $6.00@7.25; feeders, 88.00.
Dallas, has offered to place into com- I Hogs: Receipts, 13,500 head; opened
petition a cup similar to the D. A. slow, closed fairly active, steady to
Frank cup. strong; top, 810.50, bul " ‘ * - -
beginning, to err while Gregory was down “with the penalty time so near,*
playing his best tennis. However, bysaid Collector Sterzing
a surprising return to form. White ---
By Associated Presa
I JACKSONVILLE, Fla., May 30.1
, The American schooner Marion N
Oobb, at Mobile, from Venezuela for
1 Jacksonville with a cargo of guano was
. believed here early today to be at the
' bottom of the Atlantic five miles off.
। the mouth of the St, John's River. The
■ shipping board steamer Sun Dance, en
route from Tampa to Jacksonville and
I lying to off St. John’s bar because of
i fough weather, took the crew of the
I Cobb aboard early last night and in a
( wireless message to the Associated
I Press here shortly before midnignt,
j Captain Stanford of the steamer, said"
! that when last seen the decks of the
schooner were awash.
| The Sun Dane, which also lias
I aboard eleven members of the crews
I of the St. Augustine shrimp fleet
I caught in the gale off that 'city Suu •
j day, docked here this morning Two
shrimp boats, each with two men
middling, 12.45; fully middling, 12.15
middling. 12.20; low middling, 11.55’ . ,5
good ordinary, 10.70; ordinary, 10.20. -7
Sales. 8000 bales, including 5900 | -g
American.
TO ENGINEERING DEPT. wan. eg, _ ’ I
______ ! Receipts, 5500 head; beet steers and { N
tyearlings1Oe to ISc higher; all other 2
Because of their third consec utive . classes steady; heavy steers, $8,60, N
winning or the D A. Frank Intramural ' mixed, yearlinss. 88.70: yearlin.heid.
. s .. . . ers, $8.75; better grades cows. 36.500 S
trophy cup, the engineers have been 16.25; common and medium grade,
given permanent possession of this 34.25^5.25; canners. $2.75603.00; cut-
By Associated Press.
HOUSTON, Texas. May 30.— Stock-
holders from Hollywood, Cal., to Cam-
. bridge. Mass., and from Grand Forks.
N. D., to Galveston, who invested in
the S. E. J. Cox companies and saw
the prices of their stocks crumble,
were waiting today to be called as
; witnesses when the government open-
ed its testimony against the oil pro-
moter.
All preliminaries had been concluded
with the reading of the indictment yes-
terday.
| It charges Cox with making false
statements arid using the mails to de-
fraud in selling stock in three com-
panies whose capital, on paper,
amounted to" 341,000,000.
STORM OFF FLORIDA
COAST SENDS ONE OF
MORE SHIPS DOWN
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 362, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 30, 1922, newspaper, May 30, 1922; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1457134/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .